What You Need To Know About Integrated Reasoning, Part 1

On Tuesday, June 5th, the GMAT is changing with the addition of a new section called Integrated Reasoning (IR). All of our Manhattan GMAT prep classes now cover Integrated Reasoning and will prepare our students for both the old test and the new test.Our IR Strategy Guide will be released to Manhattan GMAT students on April 9th and the general public on April 24th, along with IR practice exams and online IR workshops for our students.

The following article is Part 1 of a two part overview of Integrated Reasoning written by Manhattan GMAT’s Vice President of Academics, Chris Ryan. Part 1 answers the questions What is Integrated Reasoning and When should I take the GMAT?. Part 2 covers What Is different about IR and What’s the real danger of IR?.

What is Integrated Reasoning (IR)?

IR is a new, 30-minute section that’s going to replace the Issue Essay on June 5. No other part of the GMAT will be affected. IR will have a separate score”it will not factor into the 200-800 score that you really care about.

Moreover, the new IR score will be relatively unimportant in the admissions process, for at least years. Why? The 200-800 score (together with your undergrad GPA) is a pretty good predictor of your first-year grades. That’s why the GMAT exists”to help admissions committees figure out how well you can handle the academic side of business school. Decades of research support this use of the 200-800 score.

Now along comes a brand-new section of the GMAT with a separate score. How will admissions committees use this score? They’ll look at it as just another piece of data on you”a piece of data that isn’t calibrated, because there’s absolutely zero history. Right now, it’s impossible to examine the relationship between IR scores and academic performance in b-school. There’s just a hypothesis that these things will correlate.

So, while we think this new section is interesting and well-designed, don’t overstress about it, because schools won’t care that much about your IR score.

Plus, Integrated Reasoning tests the same core skills as the rest of the GMAT! By preparing for GMAT Quant and Verbal, you’re doing the most important prep work you can do for IR.

When should I take the GMAT?

If you can be ready by June 2 (the last day of the old GMAT), take it!

Why bother with the new section at all?

For 99.99% of folks, the Issue Essay is easier than Integrated Reasoning.

Schools will take valid older GMAT scores, which are good for up to 5 years.

So if you’re ready by June 2 for the main event of the GMAT (the Quant and Verbal sections), then by all means, go ahead. Popular locations and time slots will fill up quickly, so book as soon as you can.

But if you won’t be ready until after the new section goes live, you’ll be fine!

All the preparation that you’re doing now (or that you will do by June 5) will apply to the new GMAT.

You’ll just need to do some additional training for IR specifically.

By the way, after June 5, it’ll take a full 20 days to receive official scores, so keep that fact in mind as you schedule your test.

Check back on Thursday for Part 2. For more on Integrated Reasoning, visit our IR page.

Hi, I have been preparing for GMAT and plan to write in Jan. , but I am worried that I may no do well in IR. I am planning on applying in 2013 for 2014 batch.

My question is: Should I wait longer, may be couple of months more, and prepare for IR better? Or should I just go ahead with my plan of Jan 2013? I have been preparing for almost 4/5 months now and am almost out of gas for any more preparation!

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